Legal professional privilege (LPP) protects certain confidential communications from disclosure without your client’s permission, even in court.
Hoi-Yee Roper, Stacie Bourton, Andrew Waters and Katherine Harper discuss some of the developments in legal professional privilege and provide practical tips.
Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming part of everyday legal practice and increasingly part of litigants’ everyday lives. A recent U.S. decision, United States v. Heppner, is an early signal ...
A recent federal court ruling out of New York has important implications for anyone involved in a family law matter, whether ...
A recent decision from the SDNY, United States v. Heppner, has generated outsized commentary suggesting that the use of generative AI tools may jeopardize attorney-client privilege. A closer reading ...
As more executives and litigants lean on models like Claude and ChatGPT to navigate legal issues, the courts are beginning to draw hard lines around what stays private and what gets handed over to the ...
Indian law mandates that (a) any communications between an advocate and her client, or (b) contents or condition of any ...
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